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A majority of the U.S. Supreme Court’s justices were absent from President Donald Trump’s 2026 State of the Union address Tuesday night — a conspicuous move coming just days after the high court struck down his signature global tariff policy.

Only Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. and Associate Justices Elena Kagan, Brett Kavanaugh and Amy Coney Barrett attended the speech. Justices Samuel Alito., Clarence Thomas, Neil Gorsuch, Sonia Sotomayor and Ketanji Brown Jackson were not present.

The absences followed a 6–3 Supreme Court decision ruling that Trump’s sweeping tariff plan exceeded presidential authority under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act — a major setback for the administration’s economic agenda.

In the wake of the ruling, Trump sharply criticized the justices who sided against him, saying he was ‘ashamed of certain members of the court’ and accusing them of lacking ‘the courage to do what’s right for the country.’ His criticism included members of the conservative bloc, among them two justices he appointed during his first term.

Supreme Court justices are not legally required to attend the State of the Union. Invitations are extended as a matter of tradition, and participation is left to individual discretion. Those who do attend typically enter the House chamber together in their black judicial robes and sit prominently in the front row — a visual symbol of the judiciary’s coequal status alongside the executive and legislative branches.

Still, attendance has long been uneven, reflecting discomfort within the judiciary about appearing at what has increasingly become a partisan spectacle.

Alito has not attended a State of the Union since 2010, when he famously shook his head and appeared to mouth ‘not true’ as then-President Barack Obama criticized the Court’s decision in Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission. Months later, Alito said publicly that sitting through the address made him feel like ‘the proverbial potted plant,’ and he suggested he would not return in the near future.

Roberts at the time described the political atmosphere surrounding the address as ‘very troubling,’ and questioned whether it remained appropriate for the justices to attend if the event had devolved into what he characterized as a political ‘pep rally.’ Despite those concerns, Roberts has attended every State of the Union since becoming chief justice in 2005.

Thomas has also largely stayed away in recent years. After attending President Obama’s first address in 2009, he did not return, later describing the experience as uncomfortable for members of the judiciary given the partisan reactions inside the chamber.

While some justices have consistently opted out — including past members of the court — others have continued to attend as a matter of institutional tradition.

Fox News’ Shannon Bream and Bill Mears contributed to this report. 

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Rep. Rashida Tlaib, D-Mich., wore a round button to the State of the Union address that read ‘F— ICE,’ referring to U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

She also wore a message that read, ‘STAND WITH SURVIVORS RELEASE THE FILES,’ in an apparent reference to materials pertaining to the late Jeffrey Epstein. Other lawmakers could be seen wearing that message during the speech as well.

Tlaib was seated next to Rep. Ilhan Omar, D-Minn., a fellow member of the progressive cadre of lawmakers known as the ‘Squad.’ 

The two shouted during the president’s address. They also departed the speech early, reports indicate.

Fox News Digital reached out to the White House for comment on Wednesday morning.

President Donald Trump’s administration has been working to crack down on illegal immigration. 

But some politicians, including Tlaib, have called for the abolition of ICE.

‘ICE has no place in Michigan. This is an unaccountable and violent agency that terrorizes and brutalizes our communities every day,’ Tlaib said in a statement earlier this month.

‘We have all watched as ICE agents execute American citizens in broad daylight and detain and deport our immigrant neighbors with no regard for their wellbeing, right to due process, or the myriad other laws and court orders restricting their illegal operations,’ she said in the statement.

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Presidential speechwriters sharply split late Tuesday after President Donald Trump delivered a record-breaking State of the Union address, drawing praise from allies and prompting early exits from some Democrats.

During his address, Trump focused on immigration enforcement, economic concerns and global trade issues as he occasionally sparred with Democrats like Minnesota Rep. Ilhan Omar, who, along with fellow ‘Squad’ member Rep. Rashida Tlaib of Michigan, left the chamber early, while Rep. Al Green, D-Texas, was booted after waving a sign condemning a recent Trump social media post.

Gene Hamilton, a former deputy White House counsel who has written speeches, told Fox News Digital that Trump delivered a ‘resounding speech’ and ‘could not have been more clear about the current state of our great nation.’

‘A vision of hope, prosperity, and strength, driven by strong borders, a strong economy, and a love of country.’

Hamilton said the speech was ‘juxtaposed’ against a swath of the Democratic caucus in the chamber that ‘wouldn’t even stand for the provision that the government’s first duty ‘is to protect American citizens, not illegal immigrants’.’

‘Donald Trump saved this country with his election in 2024. His administration will keep working every day to deliver real wins for the American people,’ said Hamilton, who worked in the first Trump administration and now works with America First Legal.

On the other side of the political spectrum, former Biden speechwriter Dan Cluchey told Fox News Digital that Trump did ‘less than zero to dispel the notion that he is living in his own reality.’

Asked if Trump succeeded in addressing the immigration crisis and affordability criticisms well enough, Cluchey said that while Americans endure ‘skyrocketing grocery, energy, and health costs, rising unemployment, and an economy that is growing more slowly today than in any year under President Biden, his only play is to tell families not to believe their own pocketbooks.’

‘[That] doesn’t work,’ said Cluchey, who co-hosted a SOTU watch party and speechwriting workshop across town at Georgetown University during Trump’s speech.

Asked about Trump’s ability to convey what he believed to be his administration’s successes, Cluchey said that dynamic ‘doesn’t really work when the claims you fabricate don’t square with people’s real lives.’

‘A willingness to lie brazenly about anything and everything has some utility when you’re campaigning, but it doesn’t hold up when you’re governing — and people are actually living through the constant stream of chaos, cruelty, and ineptitude,’ Cluchey said.

Trump prepares to tout border, trade wins in State of the Union

Cluchey added that Trump did not do enough to combat his critics, saying he instead came across as ‘self-obsessed and delusional as he always does.’

Unlike Hamilton, Cluchey believed Trump failed to change any minds in America with his remarks.

Hamilton separately countered that Trump did indeed reiterate that he has delivered on campaign promises.

‘For all the haters and ‘black-pillers’ who run their mouths incessantly, just one year of President Trump’s successes has dwarfed the accomplishments of entire administrations that preceded him,’ he said.

Michael Ceraso, a Democratic strategist with a background in speechwriting who worked with presidential candidates Pete Buttigieg and Bernie Sanders, offered a slightly different perspective, saying that as a Democrat, he wants a president who works toward collaboration and not someone who ‘speaks in monologues.’

‘As a voter, I may not like him. I may find his long form exhausting. But when he speaks, he never wavers from American exceptionalism,’ Ceraso said.

‘I see someone protecting our cities against those he deems a threat to democracy, revving up the economy, managing global partners, and defeating terrorism.’

Ceraso said, however, he misses former President Barack Obama and his message of intellectualism, curiosity and togetherness.

‘As a voter, I believe both parties are bad for this country.’

‘So I go with the guy who entertains me,’ Ceraso said.

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First, the particulars, because three years later, it still makes no sense. 

A Georgia football player died in January 2023 while a car he was riding in was racing other Georgia football players. More than 20 Georgia players have since been cited or arrested for speeding and/or reckless driving — including two last week.

But before we jump on Georgia coach Kirby Smart about discipline and direction and leading young men, maybe it’s time we go to the source: players. 

Maybe it’s time we take a detailed look at what we’re doing in the NIL world, and how young men flush with cash now feel bulletproof.

Wasn’t that long ago when the cycle of pandering and prostitution of athletes included cutting corners, skipping classes and answers to tests. All before they even reached high school.

From there it was academic fraud — including ACT and SAT college entrance exam fraud — and shady middlemen who brokered financial deals with colleges under the table.   

A car here, a bag of cash there. A house for Mom, and a job for Dad. All part of the game. 

Until much of the seen and unseen of this dirty dalliance no one wanted to admit was revealed with the advent of the NIL era. At least, the machinations of it all. 

Because one thing still stands clear: There were no rules in the shadows then, there are no rules in the sunlight now.   

We’ve gone from pushing players through school despite them not knowing the work — in some cases, not being able to read — to throwing millions of dollars at them before they step on a college campus.

Just to be clear: The enabling sins of the past haven’t ended. They’ve been — if you can believe this utter nonsense — reinforced with foundational money and free player movement that has soiled the entire college experience. 

Higher education is as much about academics as it is proving you can live on your own with individual responsibilities (and vices), and figuring a way to grow and prosper as a human — much less an athlete.

Now throw millions of dollars into that equation. Then add the built-in excuses and reset of free player movement.

No wonder players feel bulletproof. No wonder the greatest concern for NFL scouts now isn’t playing ability, but life skills and maturity.

How else can you explain Georgia players — after Devin Willock’s tragic death while riding in a car racing other teammates at speeds in excess of 100 mph — doing the same thing? Over and over and over. 

How else do you explain Georgia linebacker Chris Cole, one of the SEC’s top young players with a bright professional future, last week racing teammate Darren Ikinnagbon and driving 105 mph in a 65 mph zone on Outer Loop 10 in Athens, Ga.? 

Or about 2-3 miles from where Willock lost his life.

Smart can suspend players (he’s done that), he can kick them off the team (he’s done that, too). He can talk to players about the inherent danger, or have law enforcement explain the odds of significant injury and bodily harm when racing (yep, check). 

But at the end of the day, this is an individual making a poor decision.

An individual who, in many cases, has been given whatever he wants, whenever he wants, because he’s elite at the sport he plays. 

Make no mistake, players deserve their fair share of the billions in media rights universities earn every year. We’re well down that road, and there’s no going back.

The problem: We’ve taken consequences completely out of the equation.

If it doesn’t work at this school, it’ll work at that one. If this coach doesn’t like me, that coach will give me another chance. 

If I underperformed my NIL deal at this school, that school will still give me cash. 

There’s no pause in the process like there once was, no opportunity of reflection or a life reorg while sitting out a transfer season. It’s one deal to the next until you reach the NFL. 

Or you don’t, and then what have we accomplished ― other than temporary wealth? 

If Smart dismisses Cole or Ikinnagbon, there will be a line of schools waiting to take them, give them cash and further exacerbate the problem.

Three years later, it still makes no sense.  

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

It might be more difficult than ever to identify a true NFL draft sleeper prospect.

There aren’t any true unknowns among the 319 prospects invited to the NFL Scouting Combine in Indianapolis this week. Meanwhile, many players who might have been small-school darlings in years past have gravitated toward higher payouts and brighter spotlights in the NIL era.

Between the proliferation of pre-draft information and changing college enrollment dynamics, that’s left the notion of a sleeper somewhat hard to define in 2026. A player who might seem to satisfy the criteria for one person might seem like an established entity to another.

With all that said, here are eight less-heralded players who could stand out at the combine:

RB Robert Henry Jr., Texas-San Antonio

In a fairly lackluster running back class – at least beyond Notre Dame’s Jeremiyah Love – teams might be best served to pursue players with a distinct calling card rather than trying to find a true lead ball carrier. Henry has a few strengths in his elastic running style and rapid acceleration, which he utilized to average 6.9 yards per carry last season. He should be a Day 3 draw for teams looking to add a bit of juice to their backfield without investing significant resources. Though he still has to exhibit more patience as a runner, the key to aiding his stock while he’s in Indianapolis might be demonstrating more capabilities as a potential third-down weapon, as he logged just 18 carries for 114 yards last season.

WR Ted Hurst, Georgia State

The word might already be out on Hurst, a 1,000-yard receiver for the Panthers who also built a considerable buzz at the Senior Bowl. At 6-foot-3 and 207 pounds with plenty of build-up speed, he’s exactly the kind of deep threat teams seek to diversify their passing attacks and stress defenses. It will still bear watching just how he sizes up against a deep class of receivers, with many of them having faced a higher level of competition. Hurst still has work to do to fully leverage his advantages on downfield contested catches, but it seems likely that his pre-draft ascent will only continue at the combine.

WR Eric McAlister, TCU

The Horned Frogs have had a stellar run of speedy receivers in recent years, and McAlister has kept that lineage alive and well. The 6-3, 193-pound Boise State transfer is entirely at home working vertically and racing past cornerbacks to haul in big gains. Most other components of his game are still a work in progress, which leaves him a good bit behind some of the other speedy threats in this year’s group of pass catchers. Yet after this week, several NFL coaching staffs might be eager to be the ones tasked with helping polish his approach.

WR Malik Benson, Oregon

Noticing a theme here? Game-breaking speed is a major selling point for receivers outside of the first-round mix, and few have a higher ceiling in that area than Benson. The former junior college standout has had a somewhat nomadic and unfulfilled college career that included stops at Alabama and Florida State, but he showed off his potential with the Ducks by averaging 16.7 yards per catch and reeling off a handful of long scores. Like many former track standouts, the 5-11, 185-pound target poses some weighty questions on whether he can become a more complete receiver or whether he’ll need to have touches schemed for him to compensate for shortcomings in his route-running. But he’s a legitimate threat to challenge other speed merchants in Mississippi State’s Brenen Thompson and LSU’s Barion Brown and Chris Hilton Jr. for the combine’s fastest 40-yard dash time.

TE John Michael Gyllenborg, Wyoming

He’s got a name of an ’80s action movie star, as well the athleticism of one. The 6-5, 251-pounder has all the requisite traits to be a serious seam threat at the next level. It’s up to him to make good on them, however, as he never put together the kind of breakout season one would have hoped to see coming of a player who faced a lower level of competition, with just 24 catches for 217 yards and one touchdown as a senior. He’ll need to serve up a reminder of his upside at the combine or risk getting lost in a fairly muddled picture at tight end.

DT Kaleb Proctor, Southeastern Louisiana

In terms of pure disruptiveness from the interior, Proctor gets at it with the best of them. He notched nine sacks last season, an output that doesn’t capture just how problematic he was for opposing offenses. And at the East-West Shrine Bowl, he hardly looked out of place against more highly touted foes. The 6-1, 275-pounder will only be a fit for teams are willing to sacrifice a bit of strength for playmaking ability. In the right scheme, however, he could continue continue to regularly make himself at home in opponents’ backfields, even if only in a part-time role to begin.

DE/OLB Nadame Tucker, Western Michigan

Any pass rusher who ties with Texas Tech’s David Bailey, a potential top-five pick, for the Football Bowl Subdivision lead in sacks (14½) is clearly doing something right. Tucker isn’t a household name, but he combines plenty of burst and knowhow to consistently get in the face of quarterbacks. Measuring in under 6-2 and 246 pounds at the Senior Bowl, he might be reduced to a designated pass rusher in the early going, serving in a Josh Uche-lite role to shield him from being engulfed by bigger blockers in the run game. As a late-round flier, though, he’s an intriguing option for any defensive staff willing to get a little creative with his usage.

OLB Jaishawn Barham, Michigan

After a stellar start to his career at Maryland, Barham still seems to be defined by the notion of some unrealized potential. He’ll work out at the combine with the edge rushers, and it’s easy to see why teams might be drawn toward utilizing the 6-3, 243-pounder in that role. Not only is he explosive and fluid when pursuing the quarterback, he also matches those traits with his forcefulness at the point of attack. Don’t be surprised if he ends up with one of the more impressive testing profiles of the defensive prospects.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

UCLA men’s basketball flat-out outplayed USC in Tuesday night’s 81-62 win. The archrivals met for the first of their two Big Ten clashes on Feb. 24 in what was a crucial game for two teams on the bubble in USA TODAY Sports’ latest Bracketology.

The two have been on opposite trajectories as of late, with the Bruins entering Tuesday fresh off Donovan Dent’s overtime buzzer-beater to beat No. 11 Illinois and secure a much-needed quad 1 win. The Trojans, meanwhile, entered the night in the midst of a three-game losing streak capped off by a stunning 71-70 home loss to Oregon in which they led by six points with 59 seconds to go.

Those trends played continued as UCLA’s physical defense and a 30-point gem from Donovan Dent derailed a Trojans team that couldn’t find much offense from anyone not named Chad Baker-Mazara (25 points, eight rebounds, two assists).

‘They’re a very athletic team, obviously Baker-Mazara is a potent offensive player that can turn your lights out. Proud of the guys that got the job done,’ Bruins head coach Mick Cronin said postgame. ‘This late in the year, guys are just trying to win and stay healthy. … Happy with the win, and nobody got injured. So, onward.’

Here are the winners and losers from the first leg of the USC-UCLA rivalry:

WINNERS

UCLA’s tournament hopes

The Bruins entered the day as one of the last four teams in, and they just got one step closer to March with a big quad 2 win – over their biggest rivals, nonetheless. After the Illinois game on Saturday, Feb. 21, players said they’re feeling like they’re at their highest point as a team right now.

Cronin sees it a little differently.

‘I’m glad they feel that way,’ he said. ‘I would say you’re only as good as your next game. When you win, your team’s going to have a better feeling about those things. Sometimes you can play well and lose, though. We could’ve lost that game, I still thought it was one of the best comebacks we had played. … But we got a little goal here for the end of the year. We got two down, three to go.’

Donovan Dent

Dent followed up his heroics from the Illinois game with another stellar performance. He led all scorers with 30 points, two rebounds and seven assists (which also led the game). He shot 62.5% from the floor and was five-for-six from deep.

‘I’m hoping this groove continues,’ he said. ‘This is the best time to get a groove, honestly. I was struggling early this season, so for me to get in a groove right now I feel like would be huge for our team and huge for myself.’

UCLA’s offensive attack

It wasn’t just Dent who shared the love on Tuesday. The team overall moved the ball especially well, finishing the game with 18 assists, seven more than USC. Trent Perry (four assists) and Skyy Clark (three) did their part in finding the open man.

‘When we share the ball we’re a very high level offense. When we share the ball,’ Cronin said. ‘That said, Donnie had a great game. Got Tyler (Bilodeau) some balls late. … Got some different contributions (too).’

LOSERS

USC still outside the bubble

With Tuesday’s loss, the Trojans have now dropped their fourth consecutive Big Ten game and second straight quad 1 game. All 10 of their losses this season have come in conference play. They took another step back, and now their tournament hopes are standing at the edge of a cliff.

‘We’re not in the tournament,’ USC head coach Eric Musselman said. ‘We’re outside looking in. We have to figure out a way to win a game before we even worry about anything of that magnitude. We have three opportunities left, and then we have the Big Ten tournament.

‘We’re a team that has been on the bubble with three games left and we haven’t played good basketball last four games, and obviously the Northwestern loss and the Oregon loss is going to hurt us for sure.’

Growing pains for Alijah Arenas

It wasn’t all bad. Arenas finished with 10 points to be the only Trojan besides Baker-Mazara to score in double figures. A lot wasn’t good either, though. He didn’t make his first field goal of the game until late in the second half as his opportunities to make an impact early in the game were limited by foul trouble. He also had five turnovers.

But these bumps on the road are to be expected for Arenas, who didn’t make his season debut until late January due to a torn right meniscus.

‘It’s a learning curve for him,’ Musselman said. ‘We’re trying to balance his minutes and teaching him on the fly and it’s super difficult because he missed all the summer, and he missed the first half of Big Ten, and he’s a reclassification.

‘He’s an incredible talent who’s got an awesome ceiling, and he’s got an incredible future. … But it’s a process when you don’t – he doesn’t have the whole summer. He doesn’t have non-conference play, and so we’re asking him to do a lot for sure.’

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The 2026 Winter Olympics are over, the United States won its first gold medal since 1980 and now Olympians are rejoining their NHL teams for the stretch run.

The league is starting up again on Wednesday, Feb. 25, and NHL games will be played for the first time since Feb. 5. The Detroit Red Wings, Pittsburgh Penguins, New York Islanders, Buffalo Sabres, Boston Bruins, Seattle Kraken, Utah Mammoth and Anaheim Ducks sit in a playoff position after missing the postseason in 2024-25.

The trade deadline is around the corner and the rush to a playoff berth is on before the regular season ends on April 16.

Here’s a look at key questions as the NHL regular season resumes:

Will the trade deadline be busy?

The date is March 6 this year, so teams don’t have a lot of time to work something out.

There was a major trade right before the Olympic freeze when the Rangers moved Artemi Panarin to the Kings. Once the freeze lifted, the Avalanche traded defenseman Samuel Girard to the Penguins for Brett Kulak on Feb. 24.

There’s an opportunity for more trades because there’s a gap between the haves and the have-nots, and top teams have needs. The last-place Canucks, who already moved Quinn Hughes and Kiefer Sherwood, have Evander Kane and Teddy Blueger as pending free agents. The Rangers could move Vincent Trocheck, Flames center Nazem Kadri would be coveted and the Blues could be sellers.

Will the Panthers keep their Stanley Cup hopes alive?

They won the last two Stanley Cup titles, went to the Final the year before that and were Presidents’ Trophy winners in 2021-22. But that string of success suffered a serious blow when captain and Selke Trophy winner Aleksander Barkov needed ACL surgery after being injured on his first day of practice in September.

They’re also missing defensemen Dmitry Kulikov and Seth Jones and sit in last place in the Atlantic Division with 61 points, eight points out of a playoff spot. The good news is Matthew Tkachuk returned before the break and that Jones is skating with a non-contact jersey. Bill Zito is a creative general manager and Paul Maurice a top-notch coach. They have 25 games to make up those points, which is possible if they come out strong after the break. And as they showed the last three years, if they make it into the postseason, they can go far.

Can the Sabres end their playoff drought?

Their 14 years out of the playoffs is an NHL record. It looked like it might reach 15 when they started slowly. But things turned around when they fired general manager Kevyn Adams and promoted Jarmo Kekalainen. They pushed a winning streak to 10 games and now sit in the first wild-card spot in the Eastern Conference. But they lost three out of four heading into the break and will need to remedy that, especially when they will be facing the Lightning and Golden Knights two times each in the next 11 games.

Can the Red Wings end their playoff drought?

They haven’t made the playoffs in nine years and are sitting in third place in the tough Atlantic Division. Other teams have a game or more in hand. But their goaltending is better than in the past because of John Gibson, and they have plenty of cap space to make a move at the deadline.

Can Kings overcome the loss of Kevin Fiala?

Fiala broke his leg while playing for Switzerland at the Olympics, had surgery and will miss the rest of the regular season. The Kings have Panarin now, but his acquisition was designed to boost an offense that had Fiala in the lineup. Fiala leads the Kings with 17 power-play points. Los Angeles is three points out of a playoff spot, so it might need to make another trade.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Many conservatives quickly took to social media to praise President Trump’s State of the Union speech, which lasted just under two hours, energizing Republicans and riling Democrats.

‘It’s not just an excellent speech, it’s mostly POTUS himself,’ conservative radio host Mark Levin posted on X. ‘ He’s a truly historic leader. I know it drives DC nuts. Who cares.’

‘Trump is a colossus; an amazingly patriotic speech,’ FOX Business Senior Correspondent Charles Gasparino posted on X. 

‘This is the best State of the Union Address I’ve ever seen,’ conservative commentator Buck Sexton posted on X. ‘Not just by Trump. By any President.’

‘President Trump’s State of the Union put America’s greatness on full display—celebrating our war heroes, everyday heroes, and Olympic champions,’ former GOP House Speaker Kevin McCarthy posted on X. 

‘The President delivered a home run State of the Union tonight,’ GOP Rep. Chip Roy posted on X. 

Democrats on social media struck a different tone, with many prominent faces of the party bashing the president as the speech developed, including California Gov. Gavin Newsom who accused Trump of ‘destroying the country’ and posted ‘that was boring.’

President Trump tells Democrats

‘That State of the Union speech by Trump was humiliating for both him and the Republican Party,’ liberal influencer Harry Sisson posted on X. ‘He rambled incoherently and Republicans clapped like seals the whole time no matter what was said. I’m glad military heroes were honored, but he lied the entire time.’

Trump’s speech, which was the longest State of the Union in history, focused on what he called a ‘turnaround for the ages’ in the United States during his second term. 

Trump invited a swath of various guests to the speech, including everyday Americans, Turning Point USA co-founder Charlie Kirk’s widow, Erika Kirk, the U.S. men’s hockey team fresh off their gold medal win, military members who acted heroically in the time of crisis and families who have suffered tragedy at the hands of illegal immigrants.

Trump’s speech came as the GOP prepares to defend its majority in the House and Senate as the November midterms loom, and also as the nation prepares to celebrate its 250 years of independence.

‘This July 4th, we will mark two and a half centuries of liberty and triumph, progress and freedom in the most incredible and exceptional nation ever to exist on the face of the earth. And you’ve seen nothing yet,’ Trump said. ‘We’re going to do better and better and better. This is the golden age of America.’

Fox News Digital’s Emma Colton contributed to this report
 

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Democratic Rep. Jasmine Crockett of Texas said Tuesday that she would ‘boycott’ President Donald Trump’s State of the Union speech.

She blasted him as a ‘wannabe king’ and described the present state of the union as ‘grim.’

‘Tonight, I will boycott Donald Trump’s State of the Union address,’ she said in the statement. ‘The American people deserve better than a low-down, scamming wannabe king who plans to stand at that podium and spew more lies; and I refuse to legitimize the weaponization of the federal government, blatant lies and corruption, and the destruction of our Constitutional principles and democratic norms.’

Crockett, who is currently running in the Texas Democratic U.S. Senate primary, said she was not sent to D.C. ‘to coddle Donald Trump’s ego.’

‘Instead of wasting time listening to Donald Trump lie to the American people, I will be back in Texas talking with families about the true state of our union: cuts to SNAP and Medicaid, rogue ICE agents on our streets, the Epstein cover-up, attacks on the First Amendment, and the unlawful tariffs that have made life too expensive for Texans,’ she said in the statement.

She indicated that the president has an ‘authoritarian agenda.’

‘The current state of our union is grim, but it is not permanent. I will spend tonight continuing the fight to actually strengthen the State of the Union,’ she said in the statement.

Democrats have ‘done Jasmine Crockett dirty,’ in attempt to wound campaign, GOP strategist tells MS NOW

Fox News Digital reached out to the White House for comment on Wednesday morning.

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  • USC and Notre Dame aren’t going to play their rivalry the next few seasons? You’ve got to be kidding.
  • Alabama-LSU will drop off annual docket after SEC schedule changes.
  • Nebraska-Oklahoma would be welcome by any college football fan who respects tradition.

The last round of SEC expansion re-established the Texas-Texas A&M rivalry, but conference realignment has taken more than it’s given on the rivalry front.

Not only that, but the SEC’s elimination of divisions also will stop some rivalries from occurring annually. Both inside and outside of the SEC, games that were once part of the fabric of college football are no longer played every year.

On this edition of ‘SEC Football Unfiltered,’ a podcast from the USA TODAY Network, hosts Blake Toppmeyer and John Adams highlight eight rivalry games they’d wish to save or restore on an annual basis. These are games that have either already gone away, or a series that will be interrupted in the near future.

Several of the rivalries have ties to current SEC schools, but the hosts also dip into Big Ten and Big 12 terrain to restore some lost rivalries.

We’re saving/restoring eight college football rivalries

Nebraska vs. Oklahoma: The 1971 matchup of these teams, pitting No. 1 versus No. 2, ranks among the greatest games ever played. Neither program is what it used to be, but anyone who respects college football’s tradition knows this game has a place on the annual calendar. — Adams

Nebraska vs. Colorado: After the Big 12 formed in the mid-1990s, Colorado replaced Oklahoma as Nebraska’s Thanksgiving week opponent, and this rivalry rose to the billing. Those who grew up on college football in the ’90s remember this as must-watch fare, alongside some Thanksgiving leftovers. — Toppmeyer

Southern Cal vs. Notre Dame: This storied rivalry that gave us the ‘Bush Push’ will undergo interruption. These teams are not scheduled to play each other for at least the next few years. So, let’s get this straight: Notre Dame will play SMU this season and USC will play Rutgers, but Notre Dame-USC will not occur. What a farce. — Adams

Michigan vs. Notre Dame: Notre Dame used to play USC, Michigan, Penn State and Miami, all in the same season. Come 2027, the Irish are scheduled to play none of those teams. Mercy. Golden Domes vs. Maize and Blue was once appointment viewing, and it would be again if the teams had the nerve to schedule each other. — Toppmeyer

Alabama vs. LSU: This game defined the SEC West for so many years. In some seasons, it defined the college football season, period. Both teams have other rivals, sure, but few games consistently match the stakes of this one, and there’s no love lost between these two. That’s good for any rivalry. — Adams

Florida vs. Tennessee: At the rivalry’s heyday in the 1990s and early 2000s, few games were better or more important. Steve Spurrier called East Tennessee home before he turned Gator. He brought so much juice to this series. Just because something isn’t what it once was doesn’t mean it can’t still be really good. That applies here. — Toppmeyer

Oklahoma vs. Oklahoma State: Start with the name, Bedlam. Few rivalries have a better name. In-state rivalries like this one are part of college football’s backbone. This here is a classic case of realignment interfering with a good rivalry. OU owns the series, but Oklahoma State scored some signature wins, including in the last installment in 2023. — Adams

Kansas vs. Missouri: There ought to be a rule: If ‘War’ is in the rivalry’s name, it must be played annually. Such is the case here. The Border War rivalry predates football, deriving its name from the bloody years of fighting between pro- and anti-slavery factions along the Kansas-Missouri border leading up to the Civil War. Missouri’s Big 12 exit interrupted the series until it renewed last year. After 2026, there’ll be another hiatus. Ah, realignment. — Toppmeyer

Also on this episode

∎ Toppmeyer and Adams react to Joey Aguilar losing his bid for another season as Tennessee’s quarterback. One host takes up for the NCAA’s quest to enforce its eligibility rules, while the other host has less sympathy for the NCAA.

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Blake Toppmeyer is the USA TODAY Network’s national college football columnist. John Adams is the senior sports columnist for the Knoxville News Sentinel. Subscribe to the SEC Football Unfiltered podcast, and check out the SEC Unfiltered newsletter, delivered straight to your inbox.

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